02811nam 22006013 450 99663966230331620251116153623.09783839471579383947157510.1515/9783839471579(CKB)36959307300041(MiAaPQ)EBC31861646(Au-PeEL)EBL31861646(OCoLC)1482266849(DE-B1597)690942(DE-B1597)9783839471579(ScCtBLL)5e47e04e-b3ec-4457-98f1-32fed0f8d9fe(EXLCZ)993695930730004120241230d2024 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierNarrativity and Violence Conceptual, Ethical and Methodological Challenges1st ed.Bielefeld :transcript Verlag,2024.©2024.1 online resource (225 pages)Edition Kulturwissenschaft ;2869783837671575 3837671577 Frontmatter -- Contents -- Introduction -- Witnesses to Jim Crow’s Violence -- Ethical Issues in Qualitative Research -- “. . . and one must be silent about all these misdeeds.” -- Ink Painting and Woodblock Printing -- Judgement of God, Inadequate Adaptation, or Simply Menopause? -- Traumatic Memory -- Language and Trauma -- Narratives of Violence in addressing Human Rights Violations -- ContributorsSurvivors' narratives are an invaluable source for the study of violence across academic fields. At the same time, they present several difficulties for academic research. Sources may be marked by the effects of trauma, the lasting impact of perpetrators' political power or blurred lines between reality and fiction. Ethical and legal problems, distances in time between a violent event and the moment of its narration, and the variation in linguistic phrasing chosen by survivors present additional problems. Based on several case studies, the contributors explore typical problems in the study of violence through survivors' narratives, and possible ways of dealing with them.SOCIAL SCIENCE / Violence in SocietybisacshAbuse.Cultural Studies.Culture.Narratives.Narrativity.Society.Survivors.SOCIAL SCIENCE / Violence in Society.Reisinger Doris1783341Mandry Christof1783342Andresen Sabine1770531MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996639662303316Narrativity and Violence4310815UNISA